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Cleveland restaurants serve up success

The sign for French restaurant L'Albatros in Cleveland, Ohio

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The interior of L'Albatros in Cleveland, Ohio

TEXT OF STORY

Kai Ryssdal: Here's one of those recession-related conundrums that makes covering the economy so interesting: At the same time that many Americans are eating in more -- or if they do go out it's straight to the McDonald's dollar menu -- there are an amazing number of high-end restaurants opening and succeeding. A lot of them in places that have been clobbered by a falling economy. Places like Cleveland, Ohio. Dan Bobkoff of WCPN has more.


DAN BOBKOFF: I didn't expect much from Cleveland's restaurants when I moved here three years ago. I had an East Coast snob's opinion of Midwestern cooking.

Boy, was I wrong.

BOBKOFF: So what are you thinking of ordering?

MICHAEL RUHLMAN: I could order anything on this menu and be happy.

I'm at lunch with food writer -- and Cleveland food booster -- Michael Ruhlman. We're sitting in a new restaurant called L'Albatros. It's an old carriage house, with bold artwork on the brick walls. Our waiter comes over to help us decipher the appetizer.

WAITER: It's braised tongue and oxtail terrine, with pickled mustard seeds. Next to it is kind of a roulade of sorts of pork with dried figs.

I think there was some rabbit in there too. Foodies, take note. Here in the rust belt, you can now get a world class meal for about what you'd pay at an Olive Garden.

RUHLMAN: Can you believe that? Duck Confit, pork belly, two different kinds of sausages, and some great white beans, for $14 bucks? You cannot beat that!

This restaurant opened up just last year at the height of the financial crisis. Yet, owner and Chef Zack Bruell says L'Albatros is thriving. Cleveland's low cost of living means those with jobs can generally afford some nice meals. And, he says, there's a demand now for interesting food.

ZACK BRUELL: The sophistication level has changed dramatically in the last 25 years. I would never have thought of doing this concept 25 years ago.

In the next few weeks, Bruell will open his fourth new restaurant in five years. And, he has competition like never before.

From chefs like Dante Boccuzzi, who's putting the finishing touches on two new restaurants in Cleveland's up-and-coming Tremont neighborhood. It's gentrification, just blocks from once-bustling steel mills.

DANTE BOCCUZZI: Soft benches, nice coffee tables.

Boccuzzi made his name in big cities like New York, where the pace is fast and failure is common. Cleveland's cheap rent and lower start-up costs make opening here a less risky bet.

BOCCUZZI: Everything about it is a lot less. And that was one of the main draws that brought me back to Cleveland. Just the whole market itself. There's a lot of great restaurants, but it's not like there's 3,000 of them, like New York City.

But 20 years ago, chefs like Boccuzzi likely wouldn't have had much luck in smaller cities. What changed? Americans got a lot more food-savvy. They started to ask what's in their meals and where the ingredients came from. "Organic" and "local food" entered the lexicon. Enrollment went way up at U.S. culinary schools. And, let's not forget the rise of the Food Network.

IRON CHEF: The next Iron Chef is Chef Symon!

Michael Symon, Cleveland's hottest chef, put his city on the culinary map when he won the Food Network's Iron Chef competition two years ago.

ANDREW KNOWLTON: He was definitely, has become the poster child for Cleveland and every city needs a poster child.

Andrew Knowlton is the restaurant editor for Bon Appetit Magazine. He and Cleveland food writer Michael Ruhlman were both judges on that show. Knowlton says the burgeoning foodie scene in Cleveland is a microcosm for what's happening nationwide, and that the availability of great ingredients from local farms gives the Midwest an edge.

KNOWLTON: The food revolution is going to happen in the flyover states. It's not about New York and San Francisco.

Then, maybe I'm not a snob. Good food is now mainstream.

So, in Cleveland, where the food's great, I'm Dan Bobkoff for Marketplace.

Ken Harwood's picture
Ken Harwood - Dec 30, 2009

I am just back from a trip to Cleveland -- an incredible art museum; an orchestra recently rated seventh in the world, by Gramaphone; a university with a history of Nobel Prizes (Case); great health care -- The Cleveland Clinic; a University Hospital with a $1.2B building project; grand old homes ... Wonderful city!

Beau Cadiyo's picture
Beau Cadiyo - Dec 28, 2009

Don't forget the high-quality food blogs! Cleveland has a huge number of them, from my own (The Cleveland Sandwich Board - "the most important and impressive sandwich review organization to have emerged from Cleveland in the last seven years and three months") to Bite Buff, Heights Eats, ClevelanDish and Local Food Cleveland. There are more appearing every day; the food is also spurring quite a bit of creativity!

Mary K. Holmes's picture
Mary K. Holmes - Dec 23, 2009

I moved to Cleveland in 1990 and have been thrilled to see the food scene develop here since then. Parker Bosley put Cleveland on the map with his New American Bistro listed among the top 50 restaurants in the country. Linda Griffith started a Slow Food convivium here before the US office was opened.
We should be proud of so many chef owned restaurants in the region, especially those who are supporting our small farmers.

Chas Nyswaner's picture
Chas Nyswaner - Dec 15, 2009

Because my older sister has lived in Cleveland for 50 plus years, I've been visiting for quite some time. Regarding foods,my first McDonald's french fry was purchased at the E. 169th St. at Lakeshore Blvd. location-long before our area had a McDonald's. But the great restaurant evolution, since those days, is now I something I expect from Cleveland. The quaintness of Heck's and La Petite Triangle in Ohio City, Luxe in the Gordon Square area, Fat Cats, Lolita, and the great restaurants of Tremont are all examples of the blossoming Cleveland food extravaganza. And don't forget to visit The Velvet Tango Room on Columbus, also in Ohio City, for the best cocktails I've ever tasted. I'm glad Cleveland supports it's culinery wonders, large and small.

Amy Wencel's picture
Amy Wencel - Dec 12, 2009

I think I may stop in cleveland on my way home from Pittsburgh to Madison this week. maybe I'll have a nice dinner, stay overnight, ... this story's broadcast boosted holiday tourism by .003%

Sarah Phelps's picture
Sarah Phelps - Dec 12, 2009

I don't understand why anyone would be surprised! Cleveland has had amazing food for EONS!!!OK now come and see what we have here in Buffalo!!!

Myra Orenstein's picture
Myra Orenstein - Dec 11, 2009

Cleveland also has the largest organization of independent restaurants in the country..Cleveland Independents. Great restaurants. Top chefs. Cleveland has become a dining destination...perhaps one of the great secrets...

amy margolin's picture
amy margolin - Dec 11, 2009

Cleveland is a great place to visit -- with plenty of good restaurants and places to go. I'm always amazed traveling across Ohio at just how agriculturally rich this State is. A locavore's heaven!

Sean Kelly's picture
Sean Kelly - Dec 11, 2009

Cleveland has a lot going for it. The thing is - not even the locals realize what a good place it is!

L'Albatross, the restaurant in this story, is right near the Cleveland Art museum and the Cleveland Orchestra.

Stories like this one cause me to regret my exhile in Seattle

Rick Foran's picture
Rick Foran - Dec 11, 2009

Not only does Cleveland have many new and intriguing restaurant offerings, many interesting gathering places have emerged that pair novel food with great wines and beers.
For example, Bar Cento (100 wines in Italian) brings together some really great twists on food and has a perfect wine to round out the meal.
They also have a more casual bar environment (Bier Markt) that treats Belgian beers with the same level of sophistication as a wine steward. It's all located across from the West Side Market, recently listed as one of the top ten public spaces in America by Urban Land Institute.
And, best of all, everything is at reasonable Cleveland prices.